carmen the keening - American Repertory Theater
Transcription
carmen the keening - American Repertory Theater
l’amour et la mort CARMEN by Georges Bizet directed by Dominique Serrand in association with Theatre de la Jeune Lune Sep 3 — Oct 8 Loeb Stage See what’s happening at our exciting second theatre! page 5 Seven love stories with two trips to hell . . . a gripping new play from Colombia THE KEENING by Humberto Dorado translated by Joe Broderick directed by Nicolás Montero Oct 14 — Nov 12 Zero Arrow Theatre English language premiere Dear Friends, The seven productions of our new season all explore aspects of human passion and desire, from a balcony in Verona to the depths of Hell itself. Each of these love stories is told very differently – from an intimate Carmen to the infernal drama of No Exit, from the contemporary visions of The Keening and Orpheus X to classic romances by Shakespeare, Marivaux, and Chekhov. Some of these love stories are familiar, others brand new, but all promise intrigue, longing, infatuation . . . and a hellishly good night at the theatre! We’re so glad to welcome you back to the A.R.T. for a thrilling season that crosses borders, expands the repertoire, and unites artists from across cultures and genres. You have to see it. Best wishes, Robert Woodruff Robert J. Orchard Gideon Lester PLAYING AT LOVE Georges Bizet I n 1857 Georges Bizet was a young composer of promise; he was nineteen years old, a star student of Gounod and Halévy, a Prix de Rome winner. By October 1874, however, Bizet was well on his way to becoming a middleaged composer of promise. His career was floundering: he had written a good deal of stage music, some of which had received high praise in some quarters: when the leader of the art-for-art’s-sake movement, the poet Théophile Gautier, heard Les Pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers), he congratulated Bizet for breaking away from “made-to-order arias, strettos, cabalettas, and all the old formulae. He follows the dramatic action from one end of a situation to the other and doesn’t cut it up into little motifs.” But Bizet had never enjoyed unequivocal success: poor libretti, ill health, and aborted projects had frustrated his ambition. Now he was hoping that his new opera Carmen would be the turning point in his career. The music rehearsals at the Opéra-Comique were starting – and there was no end of trouble. Bizet faced strong pressure from the theatre management, and even from his own librettists, to provide a less gruesome 2 ARTicles ending; he managed to avert this threat with the aid of the two lead singers, who liked the ending as it stood. The choristers complained that the cigarette chorus was impossible – they would be unable to sing while walking around. Finally the management was so concerned that this gritty drama would antagonize spectators accustomed to more innocuous fare that it urged certain members of the public not to buy tickets. When opening night came, on 3 March 1875, the opera faced predictable charges of obscenity from conservative reviewers, and predictable applause from those who considered their taste advanced. Carmen was neither a success nor a failure, and three months later Bizet died of a heart attack, convinced that no one had understood what he was up to. Carmen has turned out to be the most indestructible of operas. It has succeeded in any number of guises, including an Otto Preminger movie, set in the AfricanAmerican South (Carmen Jones); a remarkable ballet with music arranged by Rodion Shchedrin; an eighty-minute-long reduction by Peter Brook (La Tragédie de Carmen), with only four singers. You can abridge the opera as much as you want, you can transpose it to any medium, you can even silence the singers, it still works. The stamina of the opera probably lies in its central character: Carmen, like Falstaff and Hamlet, seems larger than the particular Daniel Albright introduces Bizet’s Carmen circumstances in which she appears. The source of power for such huge personages is hard to fathom completely, but part of it lies in the fact that Carmen, Falstaff, and Hamlet are not so much finite stage roles as pretexts for a quick-change artist to show his or her stuff. We know them as caricatures: Falstaff is fat and cracks wise; Hamlet is thin, intellectual, self-stifled; Carmen is a sex-tiger. But beyond these caricatures each shows extraordinary talent in play-acting: Falstaff and Prince Hal play out two versions of an imaginary dialogue between Prince and King; Hamlet seems qualified to give advice in acting to professional players; and Carmen too is curiously detached from the roles she chooses to play – she plays at playing a sex-tiger. Before Carmen found an opera to dwell in, she lived in a story and in a poem. The story was published by Prosper Mérimée in 1845: the narrator is a Frenchman riding through the wildernesses of Spain to test his theory that the Battle of Munda didn’t occur where textbooks said it occurred. He joins up with a sinister traveling companion, who turns out to be the notorious outlaw José. Afterwards the narrator goes to Cordova, where he tries to make out the naked bodies of the women who bathe in the river at sunset, but it is too dark. As he smokes and stares he is joined by a woman, another notorious character, the sorceress Carmen. Later the narrator meets again with José, about to be executed for killing Carmen, and José tells his whole story, basically the plot of the opera, except that there is no Micaëla and little Escamillo – Carmen is briefly diverted by a bullfighter, but the man whom José kills in a knife duel is Carmen’s husband, an ugly thug. Mérimée’s narrative is subtle and crafty, full of telling details. When Carmen reads the narrator’s fortune, he notices a dried chameleon among her witch-stuff, and when Carmen stabs her coworker at the cigarette factory, José notes that she rolls her eyes like a chameleon. A chameleon she is, capable of playing a fine lady, a factory worker, a fortune-teller, the leader of a band of smugglers. Furthermore, she is an astonishing linguist, fluent in Spanish, Basque, Romany. Carmen is omniform and polyglot, because the sexual instinct is itself omniform and polyglot: sex is a tongue that we all speak. Carmen can assume any role, masculine or feminine, but she dances away from that role as soon as anyone tries to identify her with it. Far from being an odalisque, a woman who conforms to the shape of a man’s desire, Carmen takes exactly the shape you don’t want her to take; as she tells José, “Take care…When someone forbids me from doing something, that thing is as quickly done.” Carmen’s next incarnation was as the heroine of a poem by Gautier, from a collection published in 1872, the year of the poet’s death: Carmen has succeeded in any number of guises. CARMEN at a glance by Georges Bizet libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy music adaptation by directed by music director Bradley Greenwald Dominique Serrand Barbara Brooks set design Dominique Serrand costume design Sonya Berlovitz lighting design Marcus Dilliard surtitles Steven Epp Production originally conceived by Christina Baldwin, Bradley Greenwald, Jennifer Baldwin Peden, and Dominique Serrand, and performed at Theatre de la Jeune Lune in the fall of 2003. CAST Carmen is thin, a streak of black Circles round her gypsy eye. Her hair is dangerously black, Her skin, a devil burned it raw. The women say that she is ugly, The men are mad about her flesh: The archbishop of Toledo sings Upon devoted knees the mass. Her piquant, stinging ugliness Has a grain of that sea-salt From bitter seas where Venus rose Naked, with a sour smell. Gautier makes explicit what is only implicit in Mérimée: Carmen is a scruffy, sulky version of Venus herself. Carmen is also Latin for song, and she needed an opera to find her fullest expression. Recent critics have felt strongly Carmen’s irrepressible, uncircumscribable libido, her urgency of being. In her valuable handbook on Carmen, Susan McClary writes: “Carmen proves to be a difficult force to contain, however. The desire she inspires overwhelms the narrative. . . . The provocative eroticism of the ‘Habañera’ makes it a kind of Pandora’s box.” But does Bizet’s music for Carmen actually spill out of every structure that might contain it? If we imagined a Carmen in which Don José sings a series of polite, tastefully passionate arias, each terminating in a neat cadence – in which Carmen declaims in a wildly sexy recitative, mocking every convention of melodic structure – then we would have a good musical equivalent of the politics of containment in gender and class. But this is the opposite of what Bizet did. From the point of view of musical formality, Carmen is the instinctive conformist, while Don José – whose music is full of asymmetrical phrases, uncertain harmonies, and crowddispleasing special effects – is the instinctive rebel. Why did Bizet confine Carmen to a repetitive, stanzaic discourse, to her parade of hit songs? Carl Dahlhaus thought that Bizet was illustrating the fact that Carmen “is incapable of attaining lyric urgency. Carmen can parody lyricism . . . but she cannot make it her own.” But Carmen’s songs don’t parody so much as quote lyricism: she isn’t improvising but performing a routine, quoting pre-existing songs. (In the case of the Habañera a literally pre-existing song, since Bizet borrowed the sinuously chromatic tune from an African-Cuban piece by Yradier.) The songs are scripted exercises in sexual compulsion – most sexy when most restrained by the bondage and discipline of stanzaic form. Carmen is Venus; Carmen is Song, and Don José (Speech) flutters half-helplessly in her wake. Daniel Albright is Ernest Bernbaum Professor of Literature at Harvard. Carmen Don José Micaëla/Frasquita Escamillo/Soldier Zuniga/The Guide Dancaire/soldier Remendado/soldier Mercedes/cigarette girl Frasquita (Card Trio/Morceau)/cigarette girl Pastia/cigarette girl Morales child Christina Baldwin (mezzo-soprano) Bradley Greenwald (baritone) Jennifer Baldwin Peden (soprano) Bill Murray (baritone) Thomas Derrah Justin Madel (tenor) Kelvin Chan (baritone) Corissa White (mezzo-soprano) Momoko Tanno (soprano) Madeline Cieslak (soprano) Dieter Bierbrauer (baritone) Fred Metzger (soprano) CHORUS: Donna Bareket (mezzo-soprano), Neil Ferreira (tenor), Hayley Thompson-King (mezzo-soprano), Robert Shutter (baritone), Christine Teeters (soprano) Barbara Brooks (music director/piano), Kathy Kraulik (piano) SYNOPSIS As lovers pursue each other with the dangerous grace of toreadors, morality and desire clash. Betrothed to Micaëla, Don José falls passionately in love with Carmen, a gypsy who works at the local cigarette factory. Spurred on by his desire, Don José soon abets in Carmen’s escape from prison, deserts his army, and collaborates in the eponymous heroine’s smuggling operation in the mountains. Despite Don José’s sacrifices, Carmen begins to tire of her devoted but possessive lover and turns her attention to the bullfighter Escamillo. Don José begs Carmen to return to Seville with him, but she refuses. He responds with a final, violent act of passion. right: A caricature of Bizet from the cover of the magazine Diogène, September 1863. All other photos are from Theatre de la Jeune Lune’s production of Carmen below left: Jennifer Baldwin Peden, Christina Baldwin, and Bradley Greenwald. above: Christina Baldwin and Bradley Greenwald below right: The Habanera. photos by Michal Daniel ARTicles 3 THE MANY FACES OF CARMEN photos (clockwise from top left) • The first Carmen, Galli-Marié. • Jossie Perez as Carmen in the Boston Lyric Opera’s Carmen on the Common (2003). courtesy Boston Lyric Opera (c) 2002 Richard Feldman • Poster from Carmen, a Hip Hopera with Mekhi Pfeffer and Beyoncé Knowles. • Al Hirschfeld’s drawing of five Carmens in Peter Brook’s production of La Tragédie de Carmen on Broadway, 1983. • Luther Saxon and Muriel Smith in the 1943 world premiere of Carmen Jones on Broadway. • Denyce Graves and Sergei Larin in the 2002 Teatro Real, Madrid production. • A 2005 production of Carmen at the Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, Russia. • The gypsies in a Moscow Art Theatre production in the early 1900s. • Rita Hayworth’s Carmen with the smugglers in the film The Loves of Carmen. 4 ARTicles What’s Happening at Zero Arrow Theatre The Crying of the Plañidera W Ryan McKittrick traces the development of The Keening hen the director Nicolás Montero and ences, from stories he had heard over the years, the leading Colombian actress Vicky and from Hernández’s improvisations, the playHernández began developing a new, wright started to develop his narrator. He imagined one-woman piece, they spent the first week of an anonymous plañidera whose suffering would rehearsal working on a series of improvisations. An recall the experiences of so many rural Colombian anthropologist who acted with the Teatro Libre de women and whose dirges would lament the pain of Bogotá before training at the Central School of the entire nation. Speech and Drama in London, Montero guided, In a country where calamity has become rouobserved, and responded as Hernández explored tine, it wasn’t long before a gruesome article fell into a range of painful emotions and memories. After the playwright’s hands and gave him new raw hours of exhausting improvisations that produced material for a tragedy. While the artists were contears and screams, the actress sat down and said, tinuing to develop the play, Washington Post corre“My heart is wide open.” Even before the two spondent Scott Wilson sent Dorado his investigaartists had a text, they had a title for their project: tive report about the massacre at Chengue, a small Con El Corazón village known Abierto (With a for its avocado Heart Wide Open). or-chards. Montero and Situated in Hernández quickly northern Cofound themselves lombia near in need of a writer major transwho could create a portation character out of routes leading these initial exerto the cises, and transCaribbean form them into a coast, the Vicky Hernández, Nicolás Montero, Humberto Dorado. dramatic event. So region around they reunited with Chengue has their friend Humberto Dorado, a screenwriter and been caught in the crossfire of guerrilla, military, actor who had performed in Montero’s production and paramilitary forces for years. On January 17, of David Mamet’s Oleanna at the National Theatre. 2001, months after Chengue residents had repeatDorado had written roles in his screenplays specif- edly pleaded for protection from the president and ically for Hernández, and he was immediately inter- the regional military command, paramilitary forces ested in building a play around an actress he cut off the village’s electricity, marched into the describes as “a force of nature — the kind of per- town, and slaughtered twenty-six of the townsmen former who makes you think you need to put up using stones and a sledgehammer. As they left, the bars between the stage and the audience. She’s forces set fire to the town. The paramilitary AUC like a tiger, but with a profound tenderness.” (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia or United SelfInspired in part by the dearth of new Defense Forces of Colombia) carried out the attack Colombian plays, the three artists resolved to cre- to punish Chengue for allegedly giving supplies to ate a piece that grappled with the reality of their the leftist FARC (Fuerzas Armadas contemporary society. “We decided to make a Revolucionarias de Colombia or Revolutionary piece about something immediate, something that Armed Forces of Colombia). Two days after the was part of our daily lives,” explains Dorado. “We massacre, Wilson interviewed the remaining inhabhear about the horrors that surround us every day, itants of the town. They told him that they believed but we’re numb to them.” The project, which the the Colombian military, which is stationed in the writer began to envision as a modern Colombian region to combat both guerrilla and paramilitary tragedy, would recover the brutality and horror of forces, had helped the AUC carry out the attack. the atrocities that have become quotidian in the Dorado incorporated Wilson’s report in the country’s decades-old civil conflict. script, changing the locale but preserving the As Dorado observed rehearsals, a character names of the victims. And as the overall structure began to take shape. Years earlier, the playwright of the play emerged, so did the protagonist’s overhad met a plañidera (a professional mourner or arching objective. The plañidera, Dorado decided, keener) in northern Colombia who shared her life was not only sharing her life experiences with the story with him. Drawing from that woman’s experi- audience; she was also in the process of making a decision about how to confront the violence tearing For the director, the suffering endured by the apart her country. victims of rural massacres could never be fully repAs Dorado finished the script, the internation- resented on the stage, but the production had ally renowned Mexican scenic designer Alejandro brought them closer to understanding their experiLuna joined the artistic team. Luna created a sym- ence. “I made this piece in order to understand metrical, elevated playing space for the production reality,” Montero reflects, “not to interpret it. Reality that could serve as a hospital, a morgue, or a funer- in Colombia is so baroque, so complicated. When al home — all spaces the plañidera revisits over the you turn on the TV and hear about the massacres, course of the play. A large mirror was positioned and the way they are performed — not just shootupstage, and fluorescent lights extended out from ing people but virtually destroying their bodies — the stage over the audience’s heads. “I wanted to you understand that you’re dealing with something create a kind of amplified microscopic exhibition,” very complex. I don’t think there’s a language that explains Luna, “as if the set were a slide on a can represent their pain. A play, painting, music or microscope. I wanted it to be a kind of resonator for any artistic language can’t really describe the feelthe emotions of the piece.” ings we’re dealing with. But the production brought Luna also made the four elements — earth, us closer to the voices of these victims.” water, fire, and air — an integral part of the design. In 2004, A.R.T. Artistic Director Robert Incense and smoke made the air visible; purifying Woodruff saw Con El Corazón Abierto at the water flowed out of a tap; candles brought ritualis- biannual International Theatre Festival of Bogotá. tic fire to the stage; and black volcanic rocks sur- Struck by the intensity and immediacy of the prorounded the central playing space, referencing the duction, he invited Montero to direct the play at violence that has transformed a once-lush country- Zero Arrow Theatre, the A.R.T.’s new second stage side into a charred, carbonized wasteland. in Harvard Square. Using a translation by Joe When the play opened in Bogotá after almost Broderick retitled The Keening, Montero will two years of development, the public response was restage the piece this fall with the actress Marissa overwhelming. Even the ex-president, Ernesto Chibas. Luna will redesign the set, adjusting his Samper Pizano, and the then mayor of Bogotá, original model slightly for the Zero Arrow Theatre. Antanas Mokus, came to see the production. “The Montero didn’t need time to consider piece was a huge sucWoodruff’s offer to stage The cess,” remembers Keening at the A.R.T. For him, Luna. “At the end of the directing the play is an act of conperformance, everyone science and a social obligation. kept saying ‘thank you, “As a society, we need to know thank you.’ Most of the who the victims of this conflict are,” families in Colombia he explains. “These are real can tell you that they names that will travel all the way have a nephew who from Colombia to Cambridge, and has been killed. Or that be heard on the other end of the they don’t know if one of world. It’s a sort of exorcism to their relatives is alive or say these names aloud to audiin jail. They live with ences abroad. We have to try to this all the time. But you find language that will give voices never see it in the to these victims. As a Colombian Colombian theatre.” director and actor, I can’t turn my “It was a purely face away from them. For me, theatrical event,” theatre is about necessity. You Vicky Hernández in a scene from Con El Corazón Abierto in Bogotá. Dorado recalls. “People don’t do it because you want to — hear about these you do it because you have to.” tragedies every day — about the massacres, the bloody repression, the misery, the displaced Ryan McKittrick is the refugees, the violence. Everyone knows what’s A.R.T.’s Associate Dramaturg. going on. But when you see it in the theatre, the experience surpasses other means of communication.” ARTicles 5 The Colombian War in the Theatre: Humberto Dorado’s THE KEENING T he Keening is an intense monologue, nearly two hours of breathlessness. The work illustrates violence as one lives it in Colombia, displayed with unusual drama and emotion. The story unfolds in a town along Colombia’s northern coast, where a paramilitary landholder exercises power. The work relates how absolute power in the hands of bloodthirsty authorities results in every sort of outrage, how whoever dares to contradict such power is beyond salvation, even family members or friends of the powerful; how paramilitary power has spread under the protecting hand of regular state forces. It allows us to see how both forces trample upon the civil population; in areas that serve as corridors for the passage of men with guns, one group or another will seek the help of civilians, while other groups will attack civilians under suspicion of collaborating with still other groups. War leaves nothing untouched. It dissolves family bonds. It produces acts of unthinkable cruelty even in times of peace, and it distorts the economic, social, and political order. The Keening is a monologue that causes us to feel deep sorrow. It is a raw and intense work; through the memories of one woman, who is a mother, a spouse, a lover, and a supportive friend, we approach the gates of horror, of hell, in order to contemplate the naked truth. We see the proof of drug money’s corrupting influence on communities and families, an influence that leads to massacre and assassination. We see how absolute power leads to coercion, coercion to outrage and human depredation. The Keening is a work that leaves us shaken, forced to confront realities that the mass media is unable to penetrate. It is a cry and an appeal. It is the reality of war in Colombia, offered up naked to the eye. Violence is one of the fundamental themes of art in Colombia. García Márquez in literature, Fernando Botero in painting, and Víctor Gaviria in filmmaking are some of the best-known artists who have taken up this theme in their works. In theater, the seventies and eighties saw the rise of a vigorous movement with a political edge. Works like Guadalupe años 50, a collective creation of the group La Candelaria, directed by Santiago García, and The Agony of the Deceased, written by Esteban Navajas and brought to the stage by Teatro Libre de Bogotá, crossed boundaries and became icons of the marriage of art and politics. Humberto Dorado comes from precisely this same tradition. He was an actor at the Teatro Libre, and later a film director, a television actor, a writer of short stories, and the author of The Keening. In order to delve into the work in question and its setting, Colombian reality, it’s worthwhile to ask ourselves the following questions: Why, in a country so privileged by nature—with three mountain ranges, part of the Amazon rainforest, coasts on two oceans, every type of climate at every time of year, from 0 to over 100 degrees—is there more violence than almost anywhere else in the world? Why does Colombia have the oldest guerrilla fighter on the planet, Manuel Marulanda Vélez, also known as “Tirofijo”, commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), who has spent the last fifty years in arms? Why, at the northern extremity of South America, listed as one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet, are there daily massacres, selective assassinations, massive human displacement, the destruction and seizure of cities, towns, and populations at the hands of paramilitaries, guerillas, and the regular army? Where did this violence come from? Why does it continue? How does it manifest itself? by Guillermo González Uribe Origins of the Violence As in many countries, the development of Colombia as a nation was characterized by violence. For various reasons, however, Colombia has been unable to overcome that violence. Its origins can be traced back to the period of the bloody conquest of the Americas in the 16th century. The area that is now Colombia was occupied by a variety of autonomous and independent indigenous communities that were distinct from the two great precolombian empires. The Aztec of Central and North America; and the Inca, whose axis lay in what is now Peru, both possessed centralized, vertical and hierarchical governments. The conquest of these empires also took its bloody course, but once the rulers had submitted, it was easier to dominate the populace. In Colombia it became necessary to conquer and reconquer, with excessive cruelty and continuous bloodshed, each and every indigenous community on an individual basis(1). Later came the bloody wars of independence, which installed in power a class of creole leaders, bound to their own interests rather than those of society, and immersed in internal feuds that have produced dozens of civil wars throughout the country’s barely 200 years of independence. Colombia is an explosive combination: the factions of a rapacious leadership that is unconcerned with the country and that has gone unrelieved for 200 years exist alongside independent, autonomous, and rebellious factions. in the cities, and culminated in the assassination of political leader Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, who embodied, for the first time ever, the alternative of popular power. Radicalized liberal guerrillas, who did not believe in the peace offered by the traditional sectors of power, established the first leftist guerrilla organization, the FARC. Later, in the sixties and seventies, other guerrilla groups arose. In the eighties drug traffickers, allied with urban and rural business interests and the regular forces of the state, gave birth to the first right-wing paramilitary groups. The paramilitaries seek to combat the guerrillas and to capture their zones of influence, without even a thought for the methods used in order to maintain the political and social status quo. What Colombia endures today is a conflict whose protagonists are paramilitaries, guerrillas, and the state armed forces. Caught in the middle is a civil population that is disrespected, manipulated, and threatened by all the parties involved. The conflict is funded through drug trafficking, which corrupts everything it touches. Such are the paradoxes of life that the coca leaf, which for the indigenous people of South America was part of a fundamental ritual, in the 19th century was processed by westerners into cocaine, the same product which under the current conditions, because it is illegal, reaps the greatest profits possible on the international market. Colombia is the world’s largest producer of illegal drugs. It is a country where social inequalities, intolerance, and drug trafficking money have created a deinstitutionalized nation where power is the preserve of those with guns and money; as long as these drugs are illegal, the war in Colombia will be difficult to end, since the resources they contribute to the men with guns are almost inexhaustible. The The Keening is a work that confronts realities that the mass media is unable to penetrate. Recent Violence The more recent origins of violence date from the 1950s, when fighting between the two traditional parties, the Liberals and the Conservatives, led to egregious bloodshed in the countryside and AUC paramilitaries in a jungle camp in southern Colombia, 2001. THE KEENING northern coast is controlled by the paramilitaries; in the south of the country the guerillas have the greatest influence; in the center these two powers meet with the central government. Although all the parties involved are bloodthirsty and authoritarian, the paramilitaries are the cruelest and the most violent: they are best known for massacres in which they dismember (still living) peasants with electric chainsaws in the central square of a village, in front of everyone, in order to increase the terror of their action. directed by set & lighting design costume design sound design Guillermo Gonzáles Uribe is a Colombian journalist and editor and the director of Número magazine Nicolás Montero Alejandro Luna David Reynoso David Remedios CAST The Woman The Work and the Author Humberto Dorado, author of The Keening, is a multifaceted creator of stories and scripts typified by their humor and sarcasm. But in this work for the stage, drama takes the place of humor. Dorado, like other artists in his country, feels that violence exists not only in the countryside but also in the intimacy of daily life, and that its echoes strike a chord among those who—in Colombia and in other countries—are unable to live in peace while abuse and injustice are the daily bread of those around them. In this instance, art is performing the role of speaking the unspeakable and naming those who cannot be named, of pointing the finger at (social) protagonists, of touching the prohibited, in order to narrate war and terror, perhaps with the end of exorcizing them. 1. For a broad vision of the conquest of this region see Ursúa, a historical novel by the poet William Ospina (Alfaragua, 2005). at a glance by Humberto Dorado English translation by Joe Broderick Marissa Chibas SYNOPSIS A plañidera (a hired mourner or keener) is meticulously scrubbing down a room while she remembers her life in Colombia and prepares for the unthinkable. She recalls growing up as an orphan in a small town, marrying the local doctor when she was seventeen years old, and leaving the town when her husband died and the villagers turned against her. As she continues cleaning, she remembers setting out on foot with her two sons and meeting Señora Eduviges Caldera, a plañidera who takes them to the village of Aguacatal. A small town in northern Colombia far away from any of the highways, Aguacatal becomes her new home. She watches her sons grow up there. She also sees her beloved village change, as smugglers and guerrillas start passing through and demanding supplies. Eventually, she moves back to her old town and opens a funeral home. One day, her oldest son warns his mother to stay away from Aguacatal for a while. Sensing disaster, the plañidera tries to get to Aguacatal to warn her friends there, but she arrives too late. As she prepares for the most difficult mourning of her life, the plañidera makes a decision about how to confront the violence that has destroyed her family and country. US military-trained and equipped Colombian army special anti-narcotics commandos on patrol in the jungles of Colombia. MARISSA CHIBAS — The Woman Broadway: Brighton Beach Memoirs (Nora), Abe Lincoln in Illinois (Ann). Off-Broadway: The Predator’s Ball (Lori), BAM; Overtime (Nerissa, world premiere), Manhattan Theatre Club; Another Antigone (Judy, world premiere), Playwrights Horizons; Fortune’s Fools (Bonnie) Cherry Lane; Total Eclipse (Mathilde, American premiere), Westside Art Theatre. Off-off Broadway: Major Crimes (Luz), RawSpace; South (Regina) HERE. Resident: Two Sisters and a Piano (Sofia, world premiere), McCarter Theatre; The House of Bernarda Alba (Angustias), The Floating Island Plays, and Don Juan (Elvire), Mark Taper Forum; Les Blancs (Dr. Gotterling), A Temporary Place (Katie) and Judgement Day (Ana, American premiere), Baltimore Center Stage; Danton’s Death (Julie) Alley Theatre; Democracy in America (The Wanderer, world premiere), Yale Repertory Theatre; Hurricane (Rosa, American premiere), Classic Stage Company; The Tempest (Miranda) Actors Theatre of Louisville; Antony and Cleopatra (Octavia) and Comedy of Errors (Luciana), Old Globe Theatre; Ring Around the Moon (Isabelle) and The Piggy Bank (Blanche), Arena Stage; among others. She will be presenting her solo piece Chasing Cuban Tales at Intar in NY in the Spring. Ms. Chibas is Head of the Acting Program at Cal Arts. Films: Henry Fool, Getting Away with Murder, Cold Feet, Astonished, The Cartographer’s Girlfriend. Television: Law and Order, Feds, A.R.T. AND WORLD MUSIC COLLABORATE AT ZERO ARROW DOUBLE EDGE THEATRE presents the Boston premiere of the UnPOSSESSED conceived and directed by Stacy Klein EVERETT DANCE THEATRE presents the Boston premiere of Home Movies THE CIVILIANS presents the Boston premiere of Nobody’s Lunch ONE WEEK ONLY! ONE WEEK ONLY! January 11 - 15 Tickets on sale later in the fall. $30 Reserved seating ONE WEEK ONLY! APRIL 22-30 Tickets on sale later in the fall. Nov 16, 17 at 7:30pm, Nov 18 at 8pm Nov 19 at 2pm & 8pm , Nov 20, 2pm & 7:30pm $30 reserved seating “An astonishingly seamless blend of words, video, set elements and dance.” - New York Times “The Civilians, downtown’s peerless purveyors of comic docu-theater, explore truth and belief.” Time Out “Anyone (and everyone) should see Home Movies.” - The Phoenix “A startling, funny and disturbing view of what Americans hold to be self-evident these days.” New Yorker Considered to be one of the most refreshing dance companies to emerge from New England in many years, Rhode Island’s Everett Dance Theatre is nationally recognized for its innovative, theme-based concert works. The company’s latest creation, Home Movies, is a thought-provoking, sometimes somber, sometimes silly, but always artistic look at the American family as it exists today. Using dance, theater, music and video, Home Movies intertwines compelling images and poignant movement with humor and light, playful movement. Five dancers, four families, four distinct neighborhoods and a myriad of stories coexist on the stage, swirling around and intersecting with each other. New York City’s Obie award-winning theater company, The Civilians delve into the politics of information with Nobody’s Lunch, an insightful, musical look at our national identity. With extensive interviews ranging from the Head of Policy at Homeland Security to every Jessica Lynch in the phone book (who was willing to talk), Nobody’s Lunch looks at the problematic subject of how we gain knowledge and form beliefs in the current political climate. Featuring original songs by Michael Friedman, Nobody’s Lunch is a darkly comedic ride through the landscape of American public culture. The UnPOSSESSED is an imagistic fantasy inspired by Cervantes’s Don Quixote. Called “a rough jumble of wonderment” by the New York Times, the unPOSSESSED fuses popular and circus arts, including aerial theater, puppetry and commedia dell’arte, with live original music to create a world that is both visceral and hallucinatory. 617.876-4275 www.worldmusic.org 617.547.8300 www.amrep.org $30 Reserved seating MORE FROM WORLD MUSIC/CRASH ARTS AT ZERO ARROW THEATRE From South Africa VINCENT MANTSOE Friday, September 23, 7:30pm Saturday, September 24, 8pm Sunday, September 25, 3pm $30 Reserved seating Boston debut “Mantsoe is one of those rare performers whose mind, body, and spirit fully—magnificently— inhabit their movements.” Village Voice “Mantsoe is an artist of fierce uniqueness… astonishing solo work.” Dance Magazine From a long line of sangomas, traditional healers and diviners, Vincent Mantsoe dances as though he is in a state of possession, during which he opens himself up to powerful, turbulent visions. His self-defined Afro-fusion blends traditional African dance with a contemporary approach influenced by Asian forms such as Tai Chi, and Balinese dance. His riveting solo work is flooded with metaphors, dissolving images, diverging dialogues and sacred rituals. Master Class with VINCENT MANTSOE: Saturday, September 24, 11am-1pm $25 FREE PANEL DISCUSSIONS ON THE KEENING Free and open to the public at Zero Arrow Theatre. Speakers and times TBA. October 24 in collaboration with Physicians for Human Rights November 7 in collaboration with Cultural Agency. For more info – www.amrep.org 4TH ANNUAL Mantsoe’s workshops focus on spirituality, which is at the core of his creative process. This workshop will address the process of translating ritual into performance and creating a deeper connection with one’s own inner energy. KEIGWIN + COMPANY Friday, February 3, 7pm Saturday, February 4, 8pm $30 Reserved seating “It was terrific entertainment, but it was also an urban microcosm full of small important truths.” – Jennifer Dunning, The New York Times KEIGWIN+COMPANY creates provocative, witty and engaging dances. Larry Keigwin and his company of dancers combine physicality with theatricality and art with entertainment to both tease and investigate our identity in the context of contemporary pop culture. DANCE STRAIGHT UP! Featuring: Collage Dance Ensemble Lorraine Chapman, The Company & -Debra Bluth May date: tba $30 Reserved seating Dance Straight Up! honors Boston’s remarkably talented dance community by commissioning new works. This year’s fourth annual celebration features three innovative companies: Collage Dance Ensemble, Lorraine Chapman, The Company and Debra Bluth, performing world-premiere work. 617.876.4275 www.worldmusic.org 8 ARTicles This Festival focuses on alternative films with social content from Latin America, Spain and on films dealing with Latino issues in the United States. Opening film ceremonies will be held at the Harvard Film Archive on Friday, October 14, 2005. Categories include feature films, documentaries, and shorts. Winners will be announced at the festival’s closing ceremonies on Sunday, October 23. BLIFF will host over 80 films in nine days presenting socially relevant and contemporary themes, such as the predicament of the thriving Jewish community in Cuba. As in the past, the festival will host a series on Latino gay-themed films, and this year, will also feature a series of Brazilian films exploring the political and social climate in South America’s largest country. The festival will also include films from the United States, Puerto Rico, Argentina, Spain, Mexico, and more than a dozen other countries from the Caribbean, Central and South America. Many of these films are film festival award winners and will be making their Boston premiere. For information about schedules and venues, please visit the festival’s website at www.bliff.org. WELCOME TO THE CAST OF CARMEN CHRISTINA BALDWIN — Carmen Regional: Maria de Buenos Aires, Carmen, Circus of Tales, Figaro, The Man Who Laughs, Cosi Fan Tutte and The Magic Flute (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); She Loves Me, Pirates of Penzance, Christmas Carol, and Comedy of Errors (Guthrie Theater); Pirates of Penzance (Kansas City Repertory Theater); Sisters of Swing (The Great American History Theatre); The Merry Widow, Wonderful Town, and Countess Maritza (North Star Opera); Trouble in Tahiti (Nautilus Music-Theater); Quilters (New Breath Productions); Der Rosenkavalier, Madame Butterfly, Semiramide, and Faust (The Minnesota Opera); and has appeared as a soloist with the Minnesota Orchestra as well as A Prairie Home Companion. Film credits: Flourtown, Jona/Tomberry. Training: M.M. from the University of Minnesota and a B.M. from Lawrence University Conservatory of Music. DIETER BIERBRAUER — Morales Regional: Pirates of Penzance, As You Like It (Guthrie Theater); A Year With Frog and Toad (Childrens Theater Company); Hair (Pantages Theater); A Christmas Carole Petersen, A Man of No Importance (Theater Latte Da); A Grand Night for Singing (Ordway); Romeo and Juliet, Candide (Minnesota Orchestra); Honk! (Jon Hassler Theater). KELVIN CHAN — Remendado, Soldier Regional: Carmen (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); Die Zauberflöte (Opera Twin Cities); Don Carlos (The Minnesota Opera); An American Magic Flute, Cinderella (Portland Opera Works); Judith Triumphant (Ex Machina Antique Music Theater); L’Enfant et les Sortileges (Dorian Opera Theatre); Floyd Collins, Survivor’s Haiku, The Happy Prince (Nautilus Music-Theater). Served as an Artistic Co-Director (and Baritone) with Cantus. Training: Candidate for M.M., with the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. MADELINE CIESLAK — Lillas Pastia, Cigarette Girl Regional: Rusalka (Opera for the Young); Little Women, La Clemenza de Tito, Turandot, Maria Padilla, Madame Butterfly, Luciá di Lammermoor (Minnesota Opera); The Secret Garden (New Breath Productions); Little Women, Green Eggs and Ham, The Magic Flute, A Hand of Bridge (Opera in the Ozarks); Die Zauberflöte (Opera Twin Cities); The Marriage of Figaro (The University of Minnesota); Dido and Aeneas (Wellesley College). THOMAS DERRAH* — Zuniga A.R.T.: Amerika (Chief Cashier, Pollunder, Robinson), Olly’s Prison (Barry), The Birthday Party (Stanley), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Nick Bottom), Highway Ulysses (Ulysses), Uncle Vanya (Vanya), Marat/Sade (Marquis de Sade), Richard II (Richard), Mother Courage (Chaplain), Charlie in the House of Rue (Charlie Chaplin), Woyzeck (Woyzeck), The Oresteia (Orestes). Broadway: Jackie: An American Life (twenty-three roles). Off-Broadway: Johan Padan and the Discovery of the Americas (Johan), Big Time (Ted). Tours with the Company across the U.S., with residencies in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, and throughout Europe, Canada, Israel, Taiwan, Japan, and Moscow. Other: Approaching Moomtaj (New Repertory Theatre); Twelfth Night and The Tempest (Commonwealth Shakespeare Co.); London’s Battersea Arts Center; five productions at Houston’s Alley Theatre, including Our Town (Dr. Gibbs, directed by José Quintero); and many theatres throughout the U.S. Awards: 1994 Elliot Norton Prize for Sustained Excellence, 2000 and 2004 IRNE Awards for Best Actor, 1997 Los Angeles DramaLogue Award (for title role of Shlemiel the First). Television: Julie Taymor’s film Fool’s Fire (PBS American Playhouse), Unsolved Mysteries, Del and Alex (Alex, A&E Network). Film: Mystic River (directed by Clint Eastwood). He is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama. BRADLEY GREENWALD — Don Jose Regional: María de Buenos Aires, The Golem, Figaro, Così Fan Tutte, Magic Flute, The Impresario (with Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra), Hunchback of Notre Dame, Don Juan Giovanni, LifeLiberty, Carmina Burana (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); She Loves Me, Comedy of Errors (Guthrie Theater); Under Milk Wood, Torch Song Trilogy (Jungle Theater); The Last Five Years, Into the Woods, Red Tide, Hearts on Fire(Nautilus Music-Theater); The Wizard of Oz, The Snow Queen, The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins (Children’s Theatre Company); Rumblings (Minnesota Dance Theatre); Ten Thousand Things Theater; Illusion Theater; Ballet of the Dolls; and has appeared as a lyric baritone with the Minnesota Opera, North Star Opera, VocalEssence, Lyra Concert, Minnesota Orchestra, A Prairie Home Companion. Awards: Minnesota State Arts Board Music Fellowship, McKnight Fellowship for Theater Artists JUSTIN MADEL — Dancaïre, Soldier Regional: Carmen, Carmina Burana, The Ballroom (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); Madama Butterfly (Pine Mountatain Music Festival); Pagliacci , Carmina Burana,Turandot (Minnesota Opera); Wonderful Town, Countess Maritza, La Belle Hélène, The Red Mill (North Star Opera. Was the Featured Soloist at the Silver Bay Music Festival. Awards: 2004 Schubert Club Competition Winner BILL MURRAY — Escamillo, Soldier Regional: Carmen, Rigoletto, Die Zauberflöte, Der Fliegende Hollander, Norma, Nixon in China, (Minnesota Opera); Pacific Overtures, From Shadows to Light (Theater Mu); Gianni Schicchi, Les Contes Hoffmann, Ariadne auf Naxos, The Merry Wives of Windsor (University of Minnesota). Abroad: Le nozze di Figaro (La Musica Lyrica - Italy). Training: 2004 Master’s Degree in Vocal Performance at The University of Minnesota. JENNIFER BALDWIN PEDEN — Micaëla, Frasquita A.R.T.: Debut. Regional: Maria de Buenos Aires, Carmen, Carmina Burana, The Ballroom, Figaro, Cosi Fan Tutte, The Magic Flute (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); A Christmas Carol, Pirates of Penzance, Comedy of Errors (Guthrie Theater); Haroun and the Sea of Stories (Berkeley Repertory Theatre); 4 Short Operas - the Sister Project, Meditations on Arion (Nautilus Music-Theater); Street Scene, Semiramide, MacBeth, Transatlantic (Minnesota Opera); Die Fledermaus, Countess Maritza, Wonderful Town (North Star Opera); Sisters of Swing (The Great American History Theatre); The Fantasticks (Park Square Theater); Fiddler on the Roof, Carousel (Dorian Opera Theatre); and has appeared as a soloist with the Minnesota Orchestra and A Prairie Home Companion. Film Credits: Drop Dead Gorgeous, Jona/Tomberry. Training: M.M. from the University of Minnesota and B.M. from DePaul University MOMOKO TANNO — Cigarette Girl, Frasquita A.R.T.: Debut. Regional: Carmen, Figaro (Theatre de la Jeune Lune); Camelot (Chanhassen Dinner Theater); Pacific Overtures (Park Square Theatre); Eastern Parade (Mixed Blood Theater), Pacific Overture, The Walleye Kid (Theater Mu); Guys and Dolls (Lake Pepin Theater); Carousel, The Little Sweep (Dorian Opera Theatre); Hansel and Gretel (Institute of Vocal Artistry Outreach); Brigadoon (Heritage Theatre). Abroad: Bach’s St. John’s Passion, Magnificat by Pärt (Heinrich Schütz Chor-Tokyo); Gospel Concert Tour (Tokyo, Hiroshima, Yokohama, Nara). Training: M.M. from the University of Minnesota and B.A. from Nihon University. CORISSA WHITE — Mercedes,Cigarette Girl A.R.T.: Debut. Regional: The Handmaid’s Tale (North American premiere), The Magic Flute, Madame Butterfly, Carmen (Minnesota Opera); The Cradle Will Rock, The Women of Troy (Frank Theatre); The Norman Conquests (Joking Apart Theatre); Scary Christmas (Hardcover Theatre); CLIMB Theatre. Training: B.A. from Lawrence University. WHY SUBSCRIBE? It’s easy, flexible, and affordable! • All subscriptions are discounted – save up to 30% off single ticket prices • Free ticket exchange! Never miss a show because of your busy schedule. • Great seats at two exciting venues right in Harvard Square – the Loeb Stage and Zero Arrow Theatre • $10 off all additional tickets to A.R.T. events. • Receive ARTicles four times during the 2005-06 season, delivered to your home. It’s filled with informative articles on each production and intriguing looks at what it takes backstage to bring each show to life on the stage. • Enjoy discounts on parking, fine dining, and tickets to many other Boston-area theatres ARTicles 9 TO HELL . . . WITH LOVE! A . R . T. G A L A March 6, 2006 A sublime evening of cocktails, dinner, and performance A benefit to support American Repertory Theatre and its Institute for Advanced Theatre Training Call Jessica Obara at 617-495-2668 for a pre-invitation reservation SAVE THE DATE! Hod and Cassandra Irvine take the lead in sponsoring CARMEN The A.R.T. is pleased to announce that Advisory Board member Hod Irvine and his wife Cassandra have stepped forward as the Lead Production Sponsors for the A.R.T.’s opening production of its 2005-06 season — George Bizet’s greatest and mostacclaimed opera, Carmen. The A.R.T. is delighted to be welcoming director Dominique Serrrand and members of his Theatre de la Jeune Lune company back to Cambridge — celebrating a collaboration that has been highly satisfying to both audiences and critics. The opera, which will be sung in French with English subtitles, will distill the essence of Bizet’s grand pageant to create a potent and volatile chamber work accompanied by dueling pianos. The A.R.T. is deeply grateful to Hod and Cassandra, who have been in the forefront of support for our collaborations with Jeune Lune, having sponsored Moliere’s The Miser in 2004 and Amerika this past season. The Irvine’s support further reflects Hod’s love of music and opera (he is one of the co-founders of the Boston Lyric Opera), Cassandra’s love of theatre (she is a board member of the Huntington Theatre Company), and a salute to Hod’s home town of Minneapolis. Geography places no limits on the Irvine’s generosity, however; they generously supported A.R.T.’s acclaimed The Children of Herakles, directed by Peter Sellars, and the premiere of Adam Rapp’s Animals and Plants, both in 2002. For further information on the benefits and joys of production sponsorship opportunities, please contact A.R.T. Director of Development Sharyn Bahn, at 617.496.2000 x8838. 10 ARTicles With support from the Educational Foundation of America the A.R.T. initiates THE FUTURE CRITICS PROGRAM With a major grant from the Educational Foundation (EFA) of America the A.R.T. is currently launching the Future Critics Program, a new initiative within the A.R.T. Institute for Advanced Theatre Training. The program will address the pressing need for a new generation of national theatre critics by providing a rigorous education in the theory, practice, and history of dramatic criticism. Unlike any other dramaturgy program in the country, the Future Critics Program will give students first-hand experience working with the A.R.T.’s resident company of actors, directors, designers, and dramaturgs and with leading international artists. Through the various programs of the A.R.T. Institute, the theatre strives to train a new generation of theatre practitioners who will help pioneer the theatre of the future by inventing adventurous new stage vocabularies. We believe this new generation should include not only artists who embrace risk, but also critics who are willing to grapple with new artistic forms and movements in their thinking and writing about the stage. Ultimately, young writers from the Future Critics Program will be prepared to use their knowledge of dramatic literature and theory, understanding of theatre history, and respect for the creative process to support the growth of the theatre. The A.R.T. is grateful to the EFA for its ongoing support of the Institute for Advanced Theatre Training. The Institute was founded in 1987 with initial support from the EFA, and many new programs have developed over the years with their help. TIAA-CREF Renews Its Commitment to the A.R.T. for the 2005-06 Season TIAA-CREF, the noted financial services organization, is renewing its A.R.T. sponsorship for the 2005-06 season. A major part of this season’s commitment is the Faculty and Staff Discount available to Harvard University employees attending any A.R.T. performance. Steve Campbell, TIAA-CREF Client Services Director for Harvard, notes his organization “works to serve those who serve the greater good. So it’s no surprise that we would want to continue our sponsorship at the A.R.T., especially since the A.R.T. is a key cultural institution in Boston and to the Harvard community. It’s a relationship we value greatly, and one we hope to strengthen in seasons to come.” TIAA-CREF is a national financial services organization and the leading provider of retirement services to more than 3.2 million participants in the academic, research, medical and cultural fields at over 15,000 institutions nationwide. With more than $350 billion in combined assets under management (6/30/05), TIAA-CREF is one of Fortune magazine’s 100 largest U.S. companies (April 2005). Further information can be found at www.tiaa-cref.org. With TIAA-CREF as a partner, the A.R.T. can further its mission during the 2005-06 season. From Shakespeare to Sartre, the 2005-06 season promises to engage Harvard’s academic community and communities throughout greater Boston in theatre that provokes, challenges and inspires We are grateful to TIAA-CREF for its continuing support. For more information about becoming an A.R.T. Corporate Partner, please call Sharyn Bahn, Director of Development, at (617) 495-2668. ENJOY FINE CUISINE WITH OUR RESTAURANT PARTNERS. One restaurant offers exclusive A.R.T. discounts for each production of the season. Call for reservations & present your ticket stub or subscriber/member card. CARMEN offer valid Sep 3 – Oct 8 “ONE OF THE TEN TOP NEW RESTAURANTS IN THE WORLD” – FOOD & WINE MAGAZINE Pre-theater dinner (or post-matinee dinner) in either the Monday Club at $30 with a glass of house red or white wine, or dinner in the Soiree Room (open Tuesday through Saturday) for $42, with a choice of a glass of bubbly, or house red or white wine. 91 Winthrop Street 617.864.1933 www.upstairsonthesquare.com THE KEENING THE KEENING offer valid Oct 14 – Nov 12 BOSTON’S UPSCALE DESSERTERIE AND BAKERY. Receive a complimentary Prelude (light dinner appetizer) item between 6:00 and 10:00 p.m. daily, when you purchase any plated dessert in the dining room. Items include Warm Spinach Salad, Fancy Mesclun Salad, Caesar Salad, White Pizza, Farmers Pizza, Mediterranean Pizza, Hummus Plate, and Bruschetta (menu items may vary). 30 Dunster Street 617.441.9797 www.finaledesserts.com CARMEN/THE KEENING offer valid Oct 14 – Nov 12 offer valid 1st week of each show. Sep 3 – 11 & October 14 – 22 THE WELCOMING COMFORT OF A TRADITIONAL IRISH PUB IN A CONTEMPORARY RESTAURANT/PUB SETTING ONE OF THE TOP TEN NEW BISTROTS IN THE USA! Free entree with the purchase of another of greater value. 1230 Massachusetts Ave. 617.497.0400 www.graftonstreetcambridge.com THE KEENING offer valid Oct 14 – Nov 12 – FOOD & WINE MAGAZINE Ticket (section A seating) to the A.R.T. and pre-theatre dinner – $70. Call Craigie Street Bistro to make reservations and arrange for tickets. (limited availability) If you already have tickets, take advantage of the $30 prix-fixe Curtain for Certain menu!! 5 Craigie Circle 617.497.5511 www.craigiestreetbistrot.com A FUN RETRO ATOMOSPHERE SERVING GREEK SPECIALTIES, AMERICAN FAVORITES, AND BREAKFAST ALL DAY. 10% off total food bill (alcohol not included). 1105 Massachusetts Ave. 617.495.0055 ARTicles 11 ARTifacts order by phone or online curtain times 617.547.8300 www.amrep.org A.R.T. student pass Tue/Wed/Thu/Sun evenings – 7:30pm Friday/Saturday evenings – 8:00pm Saturday/Sunday matinees – 2:00pm $60 gets you 5 tickets good for any play. That’s only $12 a seat! (Full-time students only.) ticket prices LOEB STAGE A Fri/Sat evenings All other perfs $74 $64 need flexibility? become a member! B $51 $37 • for only $35, members can buy tickets at $10 off the regular prices! • and you’ll receive the benefits of subscribing (including ticket exchange) without having to plan your dates in advance. ZERO ARROW THEATRE Fri/Sat evenings All other perfs $48 $35 preplay Subscribers, Members, Seniors, Students deduct $10 Student Tickets, day of performance – $15 Groups of 10 or more save up to 60%! Call Jeremy Thompson at 617-496-2000 x8844 Preshow discussions one hour before curtain led by the Literary Department. Loeb Stage plays only. box office hours CARMEN preplays Wednesday, September 21 before 7:30pm show Sunday, September 25 before 2pm show Thursday, October 6 before 7:30pm show LOEB STAGE Tuesday – Sunday noon – 5pm Monday closed Performance days open until curtain ZERO ARROW open 1 hour before curtain playback SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND SAVE! Post-show discussions after each Saturday matinee. All ticket holders welcome. discount parking • It’s easy flexible and affordable! LOEB STAGE • All subscriptions are discounted – save up to 30% off single ticket prices Have your ticket stub stamped at the reception desk when you attend a performace and receive discounts at the University Place Garage or The Charles Hotel Garage. • Free ticket exchange! ZERO ARROW THEATRE • Discounts on parking and fine dining in Harvard Square (corner of Mass. Ave. and Arrow Street) Discount parking is available at two Harvard University lots, with limited additional parking at the Inn at Harvard and at the Zero Arrow Theatre. Go to amrep.org for more information. • and more! 617.547.8300 www.amrep.org FREE PANEL DISCUSSIONS ON THE KEENING Free and open to the public at Zero Arrow Theatre. Speakers and times TBA. October 24 in collaboration with Physicians for Human Rights November 7 in collaboration with Cultural Agency. september 4 This Festival focuses on alternative films with social content from Latin America, Spain and on films dealing with Latino issues in the United States. Opening film ceremonies will be held at the Harvard Film Archive on Friday, October 14, 2005. Categories include feature films, documentaries, and shorts. Winners will be announced at the festival’s closing ceremonies on Sunday, October 23. BLIFF will host over 80 films in nine days presenting socially relevant and contemporary themes, such as the predicament of the thriving Jewish community in Cuba. As in the past, the festival will host a series on Latino gay-themed films, and this year, will also feature a series of Brazilian films exploring the political and social climate in South America’s largest country. The festival will also include films from the United States, Puerto Rico, Argentina, Spain, Mexico, and more than a dozen other countries from the Caribbean, Central and South America. Many of these films are film festival award winners and will be making their Boston premiere. For more information and schedules, please visit the festival’s website at www.bliff.org. 6 2 3 carmen 7 8 9 10 carmen 2pm carmen 11 12 13 carmen 14 carmen 15 carmen 16 17 carmen 2pm carmen 18 19 20 carmen 21 carmen 22 carmen 23 24 carmen 2pm carmen 25 THE 4TH ANNUAL BOSTON LATINO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL. 5 1 26 27 carmen carmen carmen 28 carmen carmen 29 carmen october 2 3 carmen 30 9 4 5 6 11 carmen 12 carmen 13 7 carmen 14 17 23 keening 24 keening keening 30 18 25 keening 31 keening keening 6 7 8 keening 26 keening 20 21 15 keening 22 keening keening keening keening 27 28 29 keening keening keening keening november 1 2 3 keening keening keening 8 9 10 keening keening 4 keening 11 5 keening keening keening keening 16 17 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 sisters 27 2pm 28 29 sisters 30 sisters 7 sisters 11 2 8 9 12 13 14 15 16 3 sis SM 19 20 21 22 23 26 sisters 27 10 12 13 2pm 28 17 19 20 romeo 2pm 29 30 sisters 24 31 sisters january 26 27 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 no exit 8 9 10 11 12 13 no exit 2pm no exit 15 16 no exit no exit 22 no exit no exit 29 no exit 17 no exit 23 no exit no exit 18 no exit 24 no exit 30 19 no exit 20 no exit no exit 25 26 27 no exit no exit 14 no exit no exit 21 no exit no exit 28 no exit no exit february 31 no exit 2pm 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 romeo romeo 12 13 romeo romeo 19 20 romeo romeo 26 14 romeo 21 romeo 27 28 romeo romeo 15 romeo 22 romeo romeo 16 romeo 23 romeo romeo 17 romeo 24 romeo 9 orpheus orpheus 16 18 romeo romeo 16 r&j SM romeo 22 r&j SM romeo 29 orpheus 17 30 18 romeo 24 25 romeo romeo romeo orpheus 11 romeo romeo 23 r&j SM romeo 10 romeo 31 orpheus orpheus mar 25 8pm 1 orpheus orpheus 3 4 orpheus 10 11 orpheus 17 18 orpheus 5 orpheus 12 orpheus 19 6 orpheus 13 orpheus 20 7 orpheus 14 orpheus 21 orpheus orpheus orpheus 8 orpheus orpheus 15 orpheus orpheus 22 orpheus orpheus orpheus 2pm may 14 13 slaves 15 16 17 18 19 slaves 2pm 21 28 22 29 4 11 slaves 24 30 25 26 31 slaves 1 6 slaves 7 slaves 8 slaves 2 slaves slaves 5 27 slaves slaves slaves slaves 20 slaves slaves slaves slaves slaves slaves june slaves slaves 23 slaves slaves slaves 2pm slaves slaves slaves slaves 25 romeo romeo 15 r&j SM 4 romeo 23 11 romeo romeo 9 r&j SM romeo romeo 3 romeo orpheus 4 romeo 2pm april 2 28 orpheus orpheus orpheus sisters sisters 21 romeo 2pm sisters 14 romeo 2 r&j SM romeo 8 r&j SM romeo romeo sisters sisters sisters 7 romeo orpheus sisters 25 romeo romeo 6 2pm sisters sisters sisters sisters 5 1 r&j SM romeo romeo sisters sisters sisters march 3 sisters sisters sisters sisters sisters 18 12 15 sisters 6 keening keening keening 20 1 sisters 3 sis SM 2pm 14 keening keening 13 19 5 sisters sisters 1 2pm keening 16 keening keening 4 sisters sisters carmen carmen carmen 10 december sisters sisters carmen carmen SEASON 2005-06 9 slaves 3 slaves slaves 10 slaves slaves